APRIL.

The Shakspeare Jubilee Festival will be celebrated at the "only national theatre" on the 23rd, with the following performances:—

"The Grand Opera of 'Hamlet:' the Music by Mr. Balfe; the libretto by Messrs. Shakspeare and Bunn.

"After which, a Divertissement; in which Mr. Delferier and Madame Giubelei will, as Romeo and Juliet, dance the Capulet Polka. Grotesque Pas de Caliban, from the 'Tempest,' by Mr. Wieland; and the celebrated Desperate Combat from 'Richard the Third,' by Messrs. T. Matthews and W. H. Payne.

"The whole to conclude with a New Grand Pantomime of 'Harlequin Macbeth; or, the Magic Caldron and Walking Wood.'"

From the Opera, the following song may be predicted to be sung by the first tenor, Hamlet:—

"TO BE, OR NOT TO BE."

"Oh say!—To be, or not to be?

That is the question grave;

To suffer Fortune's slings and darts,

Or seas of troubles brave.

To die; to sleep! perchance, to dream!—

Ay, there's the rub!—when we

Have shuffled off this mortal coil!—

To be, or not to be!

"Ah! who would bear Time's whips and scorns,

The pangs of disprized love;

When he might his quietus make

By one bare bodkin's shove?

Who would these fardels bear, unless

That bourne he could foresee,

From which no traveller returns!—

To be, or not to be!"

Arrangements will be made for the characters to promenade in the day, time full dressed, upon the top of the portico, to the music of the orchestra—in beef-eater's dresses. The pageant will be very splendid.

A Terrible Railway Accident will happen, from the engine running up a cutting, and then falling back on the train.